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Scenarios for the Future of Technology 
and International Development 


THE 

ROCKEFELLER 

FOUNDATION GBN Global Business Network 

a member of the Monitor Group 




This report was produced by 
The Rockefeller Foundation 
and Global Business Network. 


May 2010 


Contents 


Letter from Judith Rodin.4 

Letter from Peter Schwartz.6 

Introduction.8 

WHY SCENARIOS?. 9 

WHY TECHNOLOGY?. 10 

THE FOCAL QUESTION. 11 

ENGAGING YOUR IMAGINATION. 11 

The Scenario Framework. 13 

CHOOSING THE CRITICAL UNCERTAINTIES. 14 

GLOBAL POLITICAL AND ECONOMIC ALIGNMENT. 15 

ADAPTIVE CAPACITY. 15 

THE SCENARIO NARRATIVES. 17 

Lock Step . 18 

Clever Together .26 

Hack Attack .34 

Smart Scramble .42 

Concluding Thoughts. 49 


Appendix 


51 





















Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 


Letter from Judith Rodin 

President of the Rockefeller Foundation 


The Rockefeller Foundation supports work that expands opportunity and strengthens 
resilience to social, economic, health, and environmental challenges —affirming 
its pioneering philanthropic mission, since 1913, to “promote the well-being” of 
humanity. We take a synergistic, strategic approach that places a high value on 
innovative processes and encourages new ways of seeking ideas, to break down silos 
and encourage interdisciplinary thinking. 

One important —and novel —component of our strategy toolkit is scenario planning, 
a process of creating narratives about the future based on factors likely to affect a 
particular set of challenges and opportunities. We believe that scenario planning has 
great potential for use in philanthropy to identify unique interventions, simulate and 
rehearse important decisions that could have profound implications, and highlight 
previously undiscovered areas of connection and intersection. Most important, 
by providing a methodological structure that helps us focus on what we don’t 
know —instead of what we already know —scenario planning allows us to achieve 
impact more effectively. 

The results of our first scenario planning exercise demonstrate a provocative and 
engaging exploration of the role of technology and the future of globalization, 
as you will see in the following pages. This report is crucial reading for anyone 
interested in creatively considering the multiple, divergent ways in which our world 
could evolve. The sparks of insight inspiring these narratives — along with their 
implications for philanthropy as a whole —were generated through the invaluable 
collaboration of grantee representatives, external experts, and Rockefeller 
Foundation staff. I offer a special thanks to Peter Schwartz, Andrew Blau, and the 
entire team at Global Business Network, who have helped guide us through this 
stimulating and energizing process. 


4 



Leading this effort at the Rockefeller Foundation is our Research Unit, which 
analyzes emerging risks and opportunities and thinks imaginatively about how to 
respond to the complex, rapidly changing world around us. This outward-looking 
intelligence function adopts a cross-cutting mindset that synthesizes and integrates 
knowledge that accelerates our ability to act more quickly and effectively. It has 
also helped to shape and build the notion of “pro-poor foresight” that is committed 
to applying forward-looking tools and techniques to improve the lives of poor and 
vulnerable populations around the world. 

I hope this publication makes clear exactly why my colleagues and I are so excited 
about the promise of using scenario planning to develop robust strategies and offer a 
refreshing viewpoint on the possibilities that lie ahead. We welcome your feedback. 



Judith Rodin 
President 

The Rockefeller Foundation 


5 


Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 



Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 


Letter from Peter Schwartz 

Cofounder and Chairman of Global Business Network 


We are at a moment in history that is full of opportunity. Technology is poised to 
transform the lives of millions of people throughout the world, especially those who 
have had little or no access to the tools that can deliver sustainable improvements 
for their families and communities. From farmers using mobile phones to buy and 
sell crops to doctors remotely monitoring and treating influenza outbreaks in rural 
villages, technology is rapidly becoming more and more integral to the pace and 
progress of development. 

Philanthropy has a unique and critical role to play in this process. By focusing its 
patience, capital, and attention on the links between technology and international 
development, philanthropy will change not just lives but the very context in 
which the field of philanthropy operates. This report represents an initial step in 
that direction. It explores four very different—yet very possible —scenarios for 
the future of technology and development in order to illuminate the challenges 
and opportunities that may lie ahead. It promotes a deeper understanding of the 
complex forces and dynamics that will accelerate or inhibit the use of technology 
to spur growth, opportunity, and resilience especially in the developing world. 
Finally, it will seed a new strategic conversation among the key public, private, and 
philanthropic stakeholders about technology and development at the policy, program, 
and human levels. 

The Rockefeller Foundation’s use of scenario planning to explore technology and 
international development has been both inspired and ambitious. Throughout my 
40-plus-year career as a scenario planner, I have worked with many of the world’s 
leading companies, governments, foundations, and nonprofits —and I know firsthand 
the power of the approach. Scenario planning is a powerful tool precisely because 
the future is unpredictable and shaped by many interacting variables. Scenarios 
~ enable us to think creatively and rigorously about the different ways these forces 

may interact, while forcing us to challenge our own assumptions about what we 



believe or hope the future will be. Scenarios embrace and weave together multiple 
perspectives and provide an ongoing framework for spotting and making sense of 
important changes as they emerge. Perhaps most importantly, scenarios give us a 
new, shared language that deepens our conversations about the future and how we 
can help to shape it. 

The Rockefeller Foundation has already used this project as an opportunity to 
clarify and advance the relationship between technology and development. 

Through interviews and the scenario workshops, they have engaged a diverse set 
of people —from different geographies, disciplines, and sectors —to identify the key 
forces driving change, to explore the most critical uncertainties, and to develop 
challenging yet plausible scenarios and implications. They have stretched their 
thinking far beyond theoretical models of technology innovation and diffusion in 
order to imagine how technology could actually change the lives of people from 
many walks of life. This is only the start of an important conversation that will 
continue to shape the potential of technology and international development going 
forward. I look forward to staying a part of that conversation and to the better future 
it will bring. 



Peter Schwartz 
Cofounder and Chairman 
Global Business Network 


7 


Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 




Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 


Introduction 


For decades, technology has been dramatically changing 
not just the lives of individuals in developed countries, but 
increasingly the lives and livelihoods of people throughout 
the developing world. Whether it is a community mobile 
phone, a solar panel, a new farming practice, or a cutting- 
edge medical device, technology is altering the landscape of 
possibility in places where possibilities used to be scarce. 


And yet looking out to the future, there is no 
single story to be told about how technology 
will continue to help shape —or even 
revolutionize —life in developing countries. There 
are many possibilities, some good and some less 
so, some known and some unknowable. Indeed, 
for everything we think we can anticipate about 
how technology and international development 
will interact and intertwine in the next 20 years 
and beyond, there is so much more that we 
cannot yet even imagine. 

For philanthropies as well as for other 
organizations, this presents a unique challenge: 
given the uncertainty about how the future will 
play out, how can we best position ourselves not 
just to identify technologies that improve the 


lives of poor communities but also to help scale 
and spread those that emerge? And how will the 
social, technological, economic, environmental, 
and political conditions of the future enable or 
inhibit our ability to do so? 

The Rockefeller Foundation believes that 
in order to understand the many ways in 
which technology will impact international 
development in the future, we must first broaden 
and deepen our individual and collective 
understanding of the range of possibilities. This 
report, and the project upon which it is based, 
is one attempt to do that. In it, we share the 
outputs and insights from a year-long project, 
undertaken by the Rockefeller Foundation and 
Global Business Network (GBN), designed to 



explore the role of technology in international 
development through scenario planning, a 
methodology in which GBN is a long-time leader. 

This report builds on the Rockefeller 
Foundation’s growing body of work in the 
emerging field of pro-poor foresight. In 2009, 
the Institute for Alternative Futures published 
the report Foresight for Smart Globalization: 
Accelerating and Enhancing Pro-Poor 
Development Opportunities, with support from 
the Rockefeller Foundation. That effort was a 
reflection of the Foundation’s strong commitment 
to exploring innovative processes and embracing 
new pathways for insight aimed at helping the 
world’s poor. With this report, the Foundation 
takes a further step in advancing the field of 
pro-poor foresight, this time through the lens of 
scenario planning. 

WHY SCENARIOS? 

The goal of this project was not to affirm what 
is already known and knowable about what 
is happening right now at the intersections of 
technology and development. Rather, it was to 
explore the many ways in which technology 
and development could co-evolve —could both 
push and inhibit each other —in the future, and 


then to begin to examine what those possible 
alternative paths may imply for the world’s 
poor and vulnerable populations. Such an 
exercise required project participants to push 
their thinking far beyond the status quo, into 
uncharted territory. 

Scenario planning is a methodology designed 
to help guide groups and individuals through 
exactly this creative process. The process 
begins by identifying forces of change in the 
world, then combining those forces in different 
ways to create a set of diverse stories —or 
scenarios —about how the future could evolve. 
Scenarios are designed to stretch our thinking 
about both the opportunities and obstacles that 
the future might hold; they explore, through 
narrative, events and dynamics that might 
alter, inhibit, or enhance current trends, often 
in surprising ways. Together, a set of scenarios 
captures a range of future possibilities, 
good and bad, expected and surprising —but 
always plausible. Importantly, scenarios are 
not predictions. Rather, they are thoughtful 
hypotheses that allow us to imagine, and then to 
rehearse, different strategies for how to be more 
prepared for the future —or more ambitiously, 
how to help shape better 
futures ourselves. 


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Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 


10 


WHY TECHNOLOGY? 

Technology was chosen as a focal point of this 
project because of its potentially transformative 
role—both in a positive and negative way —in 
addressing a wide range of development 
challenges, from climate change, healthcare, 
and agriculture to housing, transportation, and 
education. Yet while there is little doubt that 
technology will continue to be a driver of change 
across the developing world in the future, the 
precise trajectory along which technological 
innovation will travel is highly uncertain. 

For example, will critical technological 
advances come from the developed world, or 
will innovators and their innovations be more 
geographically dispersed? Or, how might the 
global economic and political environment affect 
the pace of technology development? 

It is important to state that in focusing on 
technology, this project did not set out to 
identify a set of exact, yet-to-be-invented 
technologies that will help shape and change the 
future. Rather, the goal was to gain a broader 
and richer understanding of different paths 
along which technology could develop —paths 
that will be strongly influenced by the overall 
global environment in which the inventors 
and adopters of those technologies will find 
themselves working and dwelling. Technology, 


as a category, cannot be divorced from the 
context in which it develops. The scenarios 
shared in this report explore four such contexts, 
each of which, as you’ll see, suggests very 
different landscapes for technology and its 
potential impacts in the developing world. 

Finally, a note about what we mean by 
“technology.” In this report, we use the term to 
refer to a broad spectrum of tools and methods of 
organization. Technologies can range from tools 
for basic survival, such as a treadle pump and 
basic filtration technologies, to more advanced 
innovations, such as methods of collecting 
and utilizing data in health informatics 
and novel building materials with real-time 
environmental sensing capabilities. This 
report focuses on themes associated with the 
widespread scalability, adoption, and assessment 
of technology in the developing world. While 
the scenarios themselves are narratives about 
the global environment, we have paid particular 
attention to how events might transpire in sub- 
Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia, and India. 



THE FOCAL QUESTION 

Every scenario project has a focal question — 
a broad yet strategic query that serves as an 
anchor for the scenarios. For this project, the 
focal question was: 

How might technology affect barriers to 
building resilience and equitable growth 
in the developing world over the next 
15 to 20 years? 

In other words, what new or existing 
technologies could be leveraged to improve 
the capacity of individuals, communities, 
and systems to respond to major changes, or 
what technologies could improve the lives of 
vulnerable populations around the world? A 
15- to 20-year timeframe was chosen on the 
assumption that it is both sufficiently long 


A Note on Terminology 

The Foundation’s work promotes “resilience 
and equitable growth.” Resilience refers to 
the capacity of individuals, communities, 
and systems to survive, adapt, and grow 
in the face of changes, even catastrophic 
incidents. Equitable growth involves enabling 
individuals, communities, and institutions 
to access new tools, practices, resources, 
services, and products. 


enough that significant technological change 
is plausible and sufficiently short enough that 
we can imagine some possibilities for the kinds 
of technologies that could be developed and 
applied. Focusing on how to overcome a set 
of obstacles associated with the application of 
technology to the challenges of development 
helped to both bound the inquiry and promote a 
problem-solving approach that seeks to identify 
potential, systematic intervention opportunities. 

ENGAGING YOUR IMAGINATION 

It is our hope that these scenarios help inspire 
the same future-orientation in other initiatives 
that are broadly concerned with technology and 
international development. Of course, there is no 
hard data about the future —nobody yet knows 
precisely what technologies will be successful at 
addressing new and evolving development needs. 
Rather, as you read the scenarios, think of them 
as a journey —four journeys —into a future that 
is relevant, thought-provoking, and possible. 
Imagine how the world will function and how 
it will be organized to tackle the challenges it 
faces. Who will be responsible for driving local 
and global development initiatives and what 
would that require? And what is your own role 
in leading your organization, community, or 
region to a preferred future? 


li 


Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 



Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 


Scenarios are a medium through which great 
change can be not just envisioned but also 
actualized. The more closely you read them, the 
more likely it becomes that you will recognize 
their important but less obvious implications 
to you, your work, and your community. We 
strongly encourage you to share and discuss 
this report widely, use it as a springboard for 
further creative thinking about how technology 


could shape development, and test and adjust 
your strategies or personal actions accordingly. 

It is also our hope that these scenarios help 
to identify potential areas of future work for 
governments, philanthropies, corporations, and 
nonprofits, and that they illuminate choices and 
commitments that a wide range of organizations 
may want to make in these areas in the future. 


r \ 

FURTHER READING ON TECHNOLOGY AND DEVELOPMENT 

This report adds to a growing body of literature focusing on the relationship between 
technology, development, and social systems. While not a comprehensive list, the following 
readings offer additional insights on this topic. 

• Caroline Wagner, The New Invisible College: Science for Development, 2008. 

• Institute for the Future, Science and Technology Outlook: 2005-2055, 2006. 

• RAND Corporation, The Global Technology Revolution 2020, In-Depth Analyses, 

2006. 

• World Bank, Science, Technology, and Innovation: Capacity Building for Sustainable 
Growth and Poverty Reduction, 2008. 

• UN Millennium Project, Task Force on Science, Technology, and Innovation, 

Innovation: Applying Knowledge in Development, 2006. 

• W. Brian Arthur, The Nature of Technology: What It Is and How It Evolves, 2009. 

• STEPS Centre Working Papers, Innovation, Sustainability, Development: A New 
Manifesto, 2009. 

V_ J 


12 







The Scenario 
Framework 


The Rockefeller Foundation and GBN began the scenario 
process by surfacing a host of driving forces that 
would affect the future of technology and international 
development. These forces were generated through both 
secondary research and in-depth interviews with Foundation 
staff, Foundation grantees, and external experts. 


Next, all these constituents came together 
in several exploratory workshops to further 
brainstorm the content of these forces, 
which could be divided into two categories: 
predetermined elements and critical 
uncertainties. A good starting point for any 
set of scenarios is to understand those driving 
forces that we can be reasonably certain will 
shape the worlds we are describing, also known 
as “predetermined elements.” For example, it is 
a near geopolitical certainty that —with the rise 
of China, India, and other nations —a multi-polar 
global system is emerging. One demographic 
certainty is that global population growth 
will continue and will put pressure on energy, 
food, and water resources —especially in the 
developing world. Another related certainty: that 
the world will strive to source more of its energy 


from renewable resources and may succeed, but 
there will likely still be a significant level of 
global interdependence on energy. 

Predetermined elements are important to 
any scenario story, but they are not the 
foundation on which these stories are built. 
Rather, scenarios are formed around “critical 
uncertainties” —driving forces that are 
considered both highly important to the focal 
issue and highly uncertain in terms of their 
future resolution. Whereas predetermined 
elements are predictable driving forces, 
uncertainties are by their nature unpredictable: 
their outcome can be guessed at but not known. 


13 


Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 



Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 


While any single uncertainty could challenge 
our thinking, the future will be shaped by 
multiple forces playing out over time. The 
scenario framework provides a structured way to 
consider how these critical uncertainties might 
unfold and evolve in combination. Identifying 
the two most important uncertainties guarantees 
that the resulting scenarios will differ in ways 
that have been judged to be critical to the 
focal question. 

CHOOSING THE CRITICAL 
UNCERTAINTIES 

During this project’s scenario creation workshop, 
participants—who represented a range of 
regional and international perspectives —selected 
the two critical uncertainties that would form 
the basis of the scenario framework. They 
chose these two uncertainties from a longer 
list of potential uncertainties that might 
shape the broader contextual environment of 
the scenarios, including social, technology, 
economic, environmental, and political trends. 
The uncertainties that were considered included, 


for example, the pervasiveness of conflict 
in the developing world; the frequency and 
severity of shocks like economic and political 
crises, disease, and natural disasters; and the 
locus of innovation for crucial technologies 
for development. (A full list of the critical 
uncertainties identified during the project, as 
well as a list of project participants, can be 
found in the Appendix.) 

The two chosen uncertainties, introduced 
below, together define a set of four scenarios 
for the future of technology and international 
development that are divergent, challenging, 
internally consistent, and plausible. Each of the 
two uncertainties is expressed as an axis that 
represents a continuum of possibilities ranging 
between two endpoints. 


STRONG 


LOW 



WEAK 


HIGH 


14 



GLOBAL POLITICAL 

AND ECONOMIC ALIGNMENT 

This uncertainty refers to both the amount 
of economic integration — the flow of goods, 
capital, people, and ideas —as well as the 
extent to which enduring and effective 
political structures enable the world to deal 
with many of the global challenges it faces. 

On one end of the axis, we would see a more 
integrated global economy with high trade 
volumes, which enables access to a wider range 
of goods and services through imports and 
exports, and the increasing specialization of 
exports. We would also see more cooperation 
at the supra-national level, fostering increased 
collaboration, strengthened global institutions, 
and the formation of effective international 
problem-solving networks. At the other 
axis endpoint, the potential for economic 
development in the developing world would 
be reduced by the fragility of the overall 
global economy —coupled with protectionism 
and fragmentation of trade —along with a 
weakening of governance regimes that raise 
barriers to cooperation, thereby hindering 
agreement on and implementation of large- 
scale, interconnected solutions to pressing 
global challenges. 


ADAPTIVE CAPACITY 

This uncertainty refers to the capacity at 
different levels of society to cope with change 
and to adapt effectively. This ability to adapt 
can mean proactively managing existing 
systems and structures to ensure their resilience 
against external forces, as well as the ability 
to transform those systems and structures 
when a changed context means they are no 
longer suitable. Adaptive capacity is generally 
associated with higher levels of education in 
a society, as well as the availability of outlets 
for those who have educations to further their 
individual and societal well-being. High levels 
of adaptive capacity are typically achieved 
through the existence of trust in society; the 
presence and tolerance of novelty and diversity; 
the strength, variety, and overlap of human 
institutions; and the free flow of communication 
and ideas, especially between and across 
different levels, e.g., bottom-up and top-down. 
Lower levels of adaptive capacity emerge in 
the absence of these characteristics and leave 
populations particularly vulnerable to the 
disruptive effects of unanticipated shocks. 


15 


Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 



Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 


Once crossed, these axes create a matrix of four 
very different futures: 

LOCK STEP - A world of tighter top-down 
government control and more authoritarian 
eadership, with limited innovation and 
growing citizen pushback 

CLEVER TOGETHER - A world in which 
highly coordinated and successful strategies 
emerge for addressing both urgent and 
entrenched worldwide issues 


HACK ATTACK - An economically 
unstable and shock-prone world in which 
governments weaken, criminals thrive, 
and dangerous innovations emerge 

SMART SCRAMBLE - An economically 
depressed world in which individuals and 
communities develop localized, makeshift 
solutions to a growing set of problems 


16 


STRONG 


LOW 



ADAPTIVE CAPACITY 


Lock Step 


Clever Together 


Hack Attack 


Smart Scramble 


► HIGH 


WEAK 









THE SCENARIO NARRATIVES 

The scenarios that follow are not meant to be 
exhaustive —rather, they are designed to be 
both plausible and provocative, to engage your 
imagination while also raising new questions 
for you about what that future might look and 
feel like. Each scenario tells a story of how the 
world, and in particular the developing world, 
might progress over the next 15 to 20 years, 
with an emphasis on those elements relating 
to the use of different technologies and the 
interaction of these technologies with the lives 
of the poor and vulnerable. Accompanying 
each scenario is a range of elements that aspire 
to further illuminate life, technology, and 
philanthropy in that world. These include: 

• A timeline of possible headlines and 
emblematic events unfolding during the 
period of the scenario 

• Short descriptions of what technologies 
and technology trends we might see 

• Initial observations on the changing 
role of philanthropy in that world, 
highlighting opportunities and 
challenges that philanthropic 
organizations would face and what their 
operating environment might be like 


Please keep in mind that the scenarios in 
this report are stories, not forecasts, and 
the plausibility of a scenario does not hinge 
on the occurrence of any particular detail. 

In the scenario titled “Clever Together,” for 
example, “a consortium of nations, NGOs [non¬ 
governmental organizations], and companies 
establish the Global Technology Assessment 
Office” —a detail meant to symbolize how a 
high degree of international coordination and 
adaptation might lead to the formation of a 
body that anticipates technology’s potential 
societal implications. That detail, along with 
dozens of others in each scenario, is there to 
give you a more tangible “feel” for the world 
described in the scenario. Please consider 
names, dates, and other such specifics in each 
scenario as proxies for types of events, not 
as necessary conditions for any particular 
scenario to unfold. 

We now invite you to immerse yourself in 
each future world and consider four different 
visions for the evolution of technology and 
international development to 2030. 


• A “day in the life” sketch of a person 
living and working in that world 


17 


Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 



Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 


Lock Step 


18 


Scenario 

Narratives 



LOCK STEP 

A world of tighter top-down government control and more 
authoritarian leadership, with limited innovation and growing 
citizen pushback 


In 2012, the pandemic that the world had been 
anticipating for years finally hit. Unlike 2009’s 
H1N1, this new influenza strain —originating 
from wild geese—was extremely virulent and 
deadly. Even the most pandemic-prepared 
nations were quickly overwhelmed when the 
virus streaked around the world, infecting nearly 
20 percent of the global population and killing 
8 million in just seven months, the majority of 
them healthy young adults. The pandemic also 
had a deadly effect on economies: international 
mobility of both people and goods screeched to 
a halt, debilitating industries like tourism and 
breaking global supply chains. Even locally, 
normally bustling shops and office buildings sat 
empty for months, devoid of both employees 
and customers. 


The pandemic blanketed the planet—though 
disproportionate numbers died in Africa, 
Southeast Asia, and Central America, where 
the virus spread like wildfire in the absence 
of official containment protocols. But even 
in developed countries, containment was a 
challenge. The United States’s initial policy of 
“strongly discouraging” citizens from flying 
proved deadly in its leniency, accelerating the 
spread of the virus not just within the U.S. but 
across borders. However, a few countries did 
fare better —China in particular. The Chinese 
government’s quick imposition and enforcement 
of mandatory quarantine for all citizens, as well 
as its instant and near-hermetic sealing off of 
all borders, saved millions of lives, stopping 
the spread of the virus far earlier than in other 
countries and enabling a swifter post¬ 
pandemic recovery. 




China’s government was not the only one that 
took extreme measures to protect its citizens 
from risk and exposure. During the pandemic, 
national leaders around the world flexed their 
authority and imposed airtight rules and 
restrictions, from the mandatory wearing of face 
masks to body-temperature checks at the entries 
to communal spaces like train stations and 
supermarkets. Even after the pandemic faded, 
this more authoritarian control and oversight 
of citizens and their activities stuck and even 
intensified. In order to protect themselves from 
the spread of increasingly global problems —from 
pandemics and transnational terrorism to 
environmental crises and rising poverty—leaders 
around the world took a firmer grip on power. 

At first, the notion of a more controlled world 
gained wide acceptance and approval. Citizens 
willingly gave up some of their sovereignty —and 
their privacy —to more paternalistic states 
in exchange for greater safety and stability. 
Citizens were more tolerant, and even eager, for 
top-down direction and oversight, and national 
leaders had more latitude to impose order in the 
ways they saw fit. In developed countries, this 
heightened oversight took many forms: biometric 
IDs for all citizens, for example, and tighter 
regulation of key industries whose stability 


was deemed vital to national interests. In many 
developed countries, enforced cooperation with a 
suite of new regulations and agreements slowly 
but steadily restored both order and, importantly, 
economic growth. 

Across the developing world, however, the 
story was different —and much more variable. 
Top-down authority took different forms 
in different countries, hinging largely on 
the capacity, caliber, and intentions of their 
leaders. In countries with strong and thoughtful 
leaders, citizens’ overall economic status 
and quality of life increased. In India, for 
example, air quality drastically improved after 
2016, when the government outlawed high- 
emitting vehicles. In Ghana, the introduction 
of ambitious government programs to improve 
basic infrastructure and ensure the availability 
of clean water for all her people led to a sharp 
decline in water-borne diseases. But more 
authoritarian leadership worked less well —and 
in some cases tragically —in countries run by 
irresponsible elites who used their increased 
power to pursue their own interests at the 
expense of their citizens. 

There were other downsides, as the rise of 
virulent nationalism created new hazards: 
spectators at the 2018 World Cup, for example, 



Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 











Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 


Scenario Narratives LOCK STEP 


wore bulletproof vests that sported a patch 
of their national flag. Strong technology 
regulations stifled innovation, kept costs high, 
and curbed adoption. In the developing world, 
access to “approved” technologies increased 
but beyond that remained limited: the locus 
of technology innovation was largely in the 
developed world, leaving many developing 
countries on the receiving end of technologies 
that others consider “best” for them. Some 

“IT IS POSSIBLE TO DISCIPLINE ! 

AND CONTROL SOME SOCIETIES ! 

FOR SOME TIME, BUT NOT THE : 

WHOLE WORLD ALL THE TIME.” ! 

- GK Bhat, TARU Leading Edge, India • 

governments found this patronizing and refused 
to distribute computers and other technologies 
that they scoffed at as “second hand.” 
Meanwhile, developing countries with more 
resources and better capacity began to innovate 
internally to fill these gaps on their own. 


Meanwhile, in the developed world, the presence 
of so many top-down rules and norms greatly 
inhibited entrepreneurial activity. Scientists 
and innovators were often told by governments 
what research lines to pursue and were guided 
mostly toward projects that would make money 
(e.g., market-driven product development) or 
were “sure bets” (e.g., fundamental research), 
leaving more risky or innovative research 
areas largely untapped. Well-off countries and 
monopolistic companies with big research and 
development budgets still made significant 
advances, but the IP behind their breakthroughs 
remained locked behind strict national or 
corporate protection. Russia and India imposed 
stringent domestic standards for supervising 
and certifying encryption-related products and 
their suppliers —a category that in reality meant 
all IT innovations. The U.S. and EU struck back 
with retaliatory national standards, throwing 
a wrench in the development and diffusion of 
technology globally. 

Especially in the developing world, acting in 
one’s national self-interest often meant seeking 
practical alliances that fit with those 











Scenario Narratives LOCK STEP 


interests —whether it was gaining access to 
needed resources or banding together in order 
to achieve economic growth. In South America 
and Africa, regional and sub-regional alliances 
became more structured. Kenya doubled its 
trade with southern and eastern Africa, as new 
partnerships grew within the continent. China’s 
investment in Africa expanded as the bargain 
of new jobs and infrastructure in exchange for 
access to key minerals or food exports proved 
agreeable to many governments. Cross-border 
ties proliferated in the form of official security 
aid. While the deployment of foreign security 
teams was welcomed in some of the most dire 
failed states, one-size-fits-all solutions yielded 
few positive results. 

By 2025, people seemed to be growing weary of 
so much top-down control and letting leaders 
and authorities make choices for them. 


Wherever national interests clashed with 
individual interests, there was conflict. Sporadic 
pushback became increasingly organized and 
coordinated, as disaffected youth and people 
who had seen their status and opportunities slip 
away—largely in developing countries —incited 
civil unrest. In 2026, protestors in Nigeria 
brought down the government, fed up with the 
entrenched cronyism and corruption. Even those 
who liked the greater stability and predictability 
of this world began to grow uncomfortable and 
constrained by so many tight rules and by the 
strictness of national boundaries. The feeling 
lingered that sooner or later, something would 
inevitably upset the neat order that the world’s 
governments had worked so hard to establish. • 


21 


Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 


Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 


22 


Scenario Narratives LOCK STEP 



HEADLINES IN LOCK STEP 


Quarantine Restricts 
In-Person Contact; 
Cellular Networks 
Overloaded 
(2013) 


Italy Addresses 
'Immigrant Caregiver 1 
Gap with Robots 
(2017) 


Vietnam to Require 
‘A Solar Panel 
on Every Home’ 
( 2022 ) 


African Leaders Fear 
Repeat of Nigeria's 2026 
Government Collapse 
(2028) 


2010 2015 2020 2025 2030 


Intercontinental 
Trade Hit by Strict 
Pathogen Controls 
(2015) 


Will Africa’s Embrace 
of Authoritarian 
Capitalism a la 
China Continue? 
(2018) 


Proliferating Trade 
Networks in Eastern 
and Southern Africa 
Strengthen Regional Ties 
(2023) 



ROLE OF PHILANTHROPY IN LOCK STEP 




Philanthropic organizations will face hard choices in this world. Given the strong 
role of governments, doing philanthropy will require heightened diplomacy skills and 
the ability to operate effectively in extremely divergent environments. Philanthropy 
grantee and civil society relationships will be strongly moderated by government, 
and some foundations might choose to align themselves more closely with national 
official development assistance (ODA) strategies and government objectives. 
Larger philanthropies will retain an outsized share of influence, and many smaller 
philanthropies may find value in merging financial, human, and operational resources. 

Philanthropic organizations interested in promoting universal rights and freedoms will 
get blocked at many nations’ borders. Developing smart, flexible, and wide-ranging 
relationships in this world will be key; some philanthropies may choose to work only 
in places where their skills and services don’t meet resistance. Many governments 
will place severe restrictions on the program areas and geographies that international 
philanthropies can work in, leading to a narrower and stronger geographic focus or 
grant-making in their home country only. 

V_ ) 







Scenario Narratives LOCK STEP 




TECHNOLOGY IN LOCK STEP 


While there is no way of accurately predicting what the important technological 
advancements will be in the future, the scenario narratives point to areas where 
conditions may enable or accelerate the development of certain kinds of technologies. 
Thus for each scenario we offer a sense of the context for technological innovation, 
taking into consideration the pace, geography, and key creators. We also suggest a few 
technology trends and applications that could flourish in each scenario. 

Technological innovation in “Lock Step” is largely driven by government and is 
focused on issues of national security and health and safety. Most technological 
improvements are created by and for developed countries, shaped by governments’ 
dual desire to control and to monitor their citizens. In states with poor governance, 
large-scale projects that fail to progress abound. 

Technology trends and applications we might see: 

• Scanners using advanced functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) 
technology become the norm at airports and other public areas to detect 
abnormal behavior that may indicate “antisocial intent.” 

• In the aftermath of pandemic scares, smarter packaging for food and beverages 
is applied first by big companies and producers in a business-to-business 
environment, and then adopted for individual products and consumers. 

• New diagnostics are developed to detect communicable diseases. The 
application of health screening also changes; screening becomes a prerequisite 
for release from a hospital or prison, successfully slowing the spread of many 
diseases. 

• Tele-presence technologies respond to the demand for less expensive, lower- 
bandwidth, sophisticated communications systems for populations whose travel 
is restricted. 


23 


• Driven by protectionism and national security concerns, nations create their 
own independent, regionally defined IT networks, mimicking China’s firewalls. 
Governments have varying degrees of success in policing internet traffic, but 
these efforts nevertheless fracture the “World Wide” Web. 


J 


Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 






Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 


Scenario Narratives LOCK STEP 


89 i 

■SKI LIFE IN LOCK STEP 

Manisha gazed out on the Ganges River, mesmerized by what she saw. Back in 
2010, when she was 12 years old, her parents had brought her to this river so that she 
could bathe in its holy waters. But standing at the edge, Manisha had been afraid. It 
wasn’t the depth of the river or its currents that had scared her, but the water itself: 
it was murky and brown and smelled pungently of trash and dead things. Manisha 
had balked, but her mother had pushed her forward, shouting that this river flowed 
from the lotus feet of Vishnu and she should be honored to enter it. Along with 
millions of Hindus, her mother believed the Ganges’s water could cleanse a person’s 
soul of all sins and even cure the sick. So Manisha had grudgingly dunked herself 
in the river, accidentally swallowing water in the process and receiving a bad case 
of giardia, and months of diarrhea, as a result. 

Remembering that experience is what made today so remarkable. It was now 2025. 
Manisha was 27 years old and a manager for the Indian government’s Ganges 
Purification Initiative (GPI). Until recently, the Ganges was still one of the most 
polluted rivers in the world, its coliform bacteria levels astronomical due to the 
frequent disposal of human and animal corpses and of sewage (back in 2010, 89 
million liters per day) directly into the river. Dozens of organized attempts to clean 
the Ganges over the years had failed. In 2009, the World Bank even loaned India 
$1 billion to support the government’s multi-billion dollar cleanup initiative. But 
then the pandemic hit, and that funding dried up. But what didn’t dry up was the 
government’s commitment to cleaning the Ganges —now not just an issue of public 
health but increasingly one of national pride. 

Manisha had joined the GPI in 2020, in part because she was so impressed by 
the government’s strong stance on restoring the ecological health of India’s most 
treasured resource. Many lives in her home city of Jaipur had been saved by the 
government’s quarantines during the pandemic, and that experience, thought 
Manisha, had given the government the confidence to be so strict about river usage 

V_ J 


24 






Scenario Narratives LOCK STEP 



now: how else could they get millions of Indian citizens to completely shift their 
cultural practices in relationship to a holy site? Discarding ritually burned bodies 
in the Ganges was now illegal, punishable by years of jail time. Companies found 
to be dumping waste of any kind in the river were immediately shut down by the 
government. There were also severe restrictions on where people could bathe and 
where they could wash clothing. Every 20 meters along the river was marked by 
a sign outlining the repercussions of “disrespecting India’s most treasured natural 
resource.” Of course, not everyone liked it; protests flared every so often. But no 
one could deny that the Ganges was looking more beautiful and healthier than ever. 

Manisha watched as an engineering team began unloading equipment on the banks. 

Many top Indian scientists and engineers had been recruited by the government to 
develop tools and strategies for cleaning the Ganges in more high-tech ways. Her 
favorite were the submersible hots that continuously “swam” the river to detect, 
through sensors, the presence of chemical pathogens. New riverside filtration 
systems that sucked in dirty river water and spit out far cleaner water were also 
impressive —especially because on the outside they were designed to look like 
mini-temples. In fact, that’s why Manisha was at the river today, to oversee the 
installation of a filtration system located not even 100 feet from where she first 
stepped into the Ganges as a girl. The water looked so much cleaner now, and recent 
tests suggested that it might even meet drinkability standards by 2035. Manisha 
was tempted to kick off her shoe and dip her toe in, but this was a restricted area 
now —and she, of all people, would never break that law. 

V_ ) 


25 


Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 






Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 


Clever Together 



Smart Scramble 


CLEVER TOGETHER 

A world in which highly coordinated and successful 
strategies emerge for addressing both urgent and entrenched 
worldwide issues 


The recession of 2008-10 did not turn into the 
decades-long global economic slide that many 
had feared. In fact, quite the opposite: strong 
global growth returned in force, with the world 
headed once again toward the demographic 
and economic projections forecasted before the 
downturn. India and China were on track to see 
their middle classes explode to 1 billion by 2020. 
Mega-cities like Sao Paulo and Jakarta expanded 
at a blistering pace as millions poured in from 
rural areas. Countries raced to industrialize 
by whatever means necessary; the global 
marketplace bustled. 

But two big problems loomed. First, not all 
people and places benefited equally from this 
return to globalized growth: all boats were 
rising, but some were clearly rising more. 

Second, those hell-bent on development 


and expansion largely ignored the very 
real environmental consequences of their 
unrestricted growth. Undeniably, the planet’s 
climate was becoming increasingly unstable. 

Sea levels were rising fast, even as countries 
continued to build-out coastal mega-cities. In 
2014, the Hudson River overflowed into New 
York City during a storm surge, turning the 
World Trade Center site into a three-foot-deep 
lake. The image of motorboats navigating 
through lower Manhattan jarred the world’s 
most powerful nations into realizing that climate 
change was not just a developing-world problem. 
That same year, new measurements showing that 
atmospheric carbon dioxide levels were climbing 
precipitously created new urgency and pressure 
for governments (really, for everyone) to do 
something fast. 










In such an interconnected world, where the 
behaviors of one country, company, or individual 
had potentially high-impact effects on all others, 
piecemeal attempts by one nation here, one 
small collective of environmental organizations 
there, would not be enough to stave off a climate 
disaster —or, for that matter, to effectively 
address a host of other planetary-scale problems. 
But highly coordinated worldwide strategies for 
addressing such urgent issues just might. What 
was needed was systems thinking —and systems 
acting —on a global scale. 


capture processes that would best support 
the global ecosystem. A functioning global 
cap and trade system was also established. 
Worldwide, the pressure to reduce waste and 
increase efficiency in planet-friendly ways was 
enormous. New globally coordinated systems 
for monitoring energy use capacity —including 
smart grids and bottom-up pattern recognition 
technologies —were rolled out. These efforts 
produced real results: by 2022, new projections 
showed a significant slowing in the rise of 
atmospheric carbon levels. 


International coordination started slowly, then 
accelerated faster than anyone had imagined. 
In 2015, a critical mass of middle income and 
developed countries with strong economic 
growth publicly committed to leveraging 
their resources against global-scale problems, 
beginning with climate change. Together, their 
governments hashed out plans for monitoring 
and reducing greenhouse gas emissions in 
the short term and improving the absorptive 
capacity of the natural environment over the 
long term. In 2017, an international agreement 
was reached on carbon sequestration (by then, 
most multinational corporations had a chief 
carbon officer) and intellectual and financial 
resources were pooled to build out carbon 


Inspired by the success of this experiment in 
collective global action, large-scale coordinated 
initiatives intensified. Centralized global 
oversight and governance structures sprang 
up, not just for energy use but also for disease 
and technology standards. Such systems 
and structures required far greater levels of 
transparency, which in turn required more 
tech-enabled data collection, processing, and 
feedback. Enormous, benign “sousveillance” 
systems allowed citizens to access data —all 
publically available —in real time and react. 
Nation-states lost some of their power and 
importance as global architecture strengthened 
and regional governance structures emerged. 
International oversight entities like the UN 


27 


Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 



Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 


Scenario Narratives CLEVER TOGETHER 


took on new levels of authority, as did regional 
systems like the Association of Southeast Asian 
Nations (ASEAN), the New Partnership for 
Africa’s Development (NEPAD), and the Asian 
Development Bank (ADB). The worldwide spirit 

“WHAT IS OFTEN SURPRISING i 
ABOUT NEW TECHNOLOGIES ! 

IS COLLATERAL DAMAGE: THE ! 

EXTENT OF THE PROBLEM THAT | 

YOU CAN CREATE BY SOLVING j 
ANOTHER PROBLEM IS ALWAYS A : 

BIT OF A SURPRISE.” j 

- Michael Free, Program for Appropriate • 

Technology in Health (PATH) ; 

of collaboration also fostered new alliances and 
alignments among corporations, NGOs, and 
communities. 

These strong alliances laid the groundwork for 
more global and participatory attempts to solve 
big problems and raise the standard of living of 
everyone. Coordinated efforts to tackle long- 
entrenched problems like hunger, disease, and 
access to basic needs took hold. New inexpensive 
technologies like better medical diagnostics and 
more effective vaccines improved healthcare 


delivery and health outcomes. Companies, 

NGOs, and governments —often acting 
together —launched pilot programs and learning 
labs to figure out how to best meet the needs 
of particular communities, increasing the 
knowledge base of what worked and what didn’t. 
Pharmaceuticals giants released thousands of 
drug compounds shown to be effective against 
diseases like malaria into the public domain 
as part of an “open innovation” agenda; they 
also opened their archives of R8tD on neglected 
diseases deemed not commercially viable, 
offering seed funding to scientists who wanted 
to carry the research forward. 

There was a push for major innovations in 
energy and water for the developing world, 
as those areas were thought to be the key to 
improving equity. Better food distribution was 
also high on the agenda, and more open markets 
and south-south trade helped make this a reality. 
In 2022, a consortium of nations, NGOs, and 
companies established the Global Technology 
Assessment Office, providing easily accessible, 
real-time information about the costs and 
benefits of various technology applications to 
developing and developed countries alike. All 
of these efforts translated into real progress on 
real problems, opening up new opportunities 





Scenario Narratives CLEVER TOGETHER 


to address the needs of the bottom billion —and 
enabling developing countries to become engines 
of growth in their own right. 

In many parts of the developing world, economic 
growth rates increased due to a host of factors. 
Improved infrastructure accelerated the greater 
mobility of both people and goods, and urban 
and rural areas got better connected. In Africa, 
growth that started on the coasts spread inward 
along new transportation corridors. Increased 
trade drove the specialization of individual firms 
and the overall diversification of economies. 

In many places, traditional social barriers to 
overcoming poverty grew less relevant as more 
people gained access to a spectrum of useful 
technologies —from disposable computers to do- 
it-yourself (DIY) windmills. 

Given the circumstances that forced these new 
heights of global cooperation and responsibility, 
it was no surprise that much of the growth 
in the developing world was achieved more 
cleanly and more “greenly.” In Africa, there 
was a big push for solar energy, as the physical 
geography and low population density of much 
of the continent enabled the proliferation of 
solar farms. The Desertec initiative to create 
massive thermal electricity plants to supply 
both North Africa and, via undersea cable lines, 
Southern Europe was a huge success. By 2025, 
a majority of electricity in the Maghreb was 
coming from solar, with exports of that power 
earning valuable foreign currency. The switch 


to solar created new “sun” jobs, drastically cut 
C0 2 emissions, and earned governments billions 
annually. India exploited its geography to create 
similar “solar valleys” while decentralized solar- 
powered drip irrigation systems became popular 
in sub-Saharan Africa. 

Reduced energy dependency enabled all of these 
countries and regions to better control and 
manage their own resources. In Africa, political 
architecture above the nation-state level, like 
the African Union, strengthened and contributed 
to a “good governance” drive. Regional 
integration through COMESA (the Common 
Market for Eastern and Southern Africa) and 
other institutions allowed member nations to 
better organize to meet their collective needs as 
consumers and increasingly as producers. 

Over the course of two decades, enormous strides 
were made to make the world less wasteful, more 
efficient, and more inclusive. But the world was 
far from perfect. There were still failed states 
and places with few resources. Moreover, such 
rapid progress had created new problems. Rising 
consumption standards unexpectedly ushered 
in a new set of pressures: the improved food 
distribution system, for example, generated a 
food production crisis due to greater demand. 
Indeed, demand for everything was growing 
exponentially. By 2028, despite ongoing efforts 
to guide “smart growth,” it was becoming clear 
that the world could not support such rapid 
growth forever. • 


29 


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Scenario Narratives CLEVER TOGETHER 


HEADLINES IN CLEVER TOGETHER 


Global Economy 
Turns the Corner 
( 2011 ) 


'Info Cruncher 1 Is 
Grads'Job of 

Choice as Data A First: U.S. Solar 

Era Dawns Power Cheaper than Coal 

(2016) < 202 °) 


Consortium of Foundations 
Launches Third Green 
Revolution as Food 
Shortages Loom (2027) 


2010 2015 2020 2025 2030 


Radical U.S. and China 
Emission Targets Signal 
New Era in Climate 
Change Negotiations 
(2015) 


Green Infrastructure 
Reshapes Economic 
Landscape 
(2018) 


Transparency International 
Reports 10th Consecutive Year 
of Improved Governance 
(2025) 



\ 

ROLE OF PHILANTHROPY in clever together 


In this world, philanthropic organizations focus their attention on the needs of the 
bottom billion, collaborating with governments, businesses, and local NGOs to improve 
standards of living around the globe. Operationally, this is a “virtual model” world 
in which philanthropies use all of the tools at their disposal to reinforce and bolster 
their work. With partnerships and networks increasingly key, philanthropies work in a 
more virtual way, characterized by lots of wikis, blogs, workspaces, video conferences, 
and virtual convenings. Smaller philanthropies proliferate, with a growing number of 
major donors emerging from the developing world. 


Systems thinking and knowledge management prove to be critical skills, as 
philanthropic organizations seek to share and spread best practices, identify leapfrog 
opportunities, and better spot problems in failed or weak states. There are considerable 
flows of talent between the for-profit and nonprofit sectors, and the lines between 
these types of organizations become increasingly blurred. 

V_ ) 


30 







Scenario Narratives CLEVER TOGETHER 


-1 

TECHNOLOGY in clever together 

In “Clever Together,” strong global cooperation on a range of issues drives technological 
breakthroughs that combat disease, climate change, and energy shortages. Trade and 
foreign direct investment spread technologies in all directions and make products 
cheaper for people in the developing world, thereby widening access to a range of 
technologies. The atmosphere of cooperation and transparency allows states and 
regions to glean insights from massive datasets to vastly improve the management 
and allocation of financial and environmental resources. 

Technology trends and applications we might see: 

• The cost of capturing data through nanosensors and smart networks falls 
precipitously. In many developing countries, this leads to a proliferation of 
new and useful services, including “sousveillance” mechanisms that improve 
governance and enable more efficient use of government resources. 

• Intelligent electricity, water distribution, and transportation systems develop 
in urban areas. In these “smart cities,” internet access is seen as a basic right 
by the late 2010s. 

• A malaria vaccine is developed and deployed broadly —saving millions of lives 
in the developing world. 

• Advances in low-cost mind-controlled prosthetics aid the 80 percent of global 
amputees who live in developing countries. 

• Solar power is made vastly more efficient through advances in materials, 
including polymers and nanoparticles. An effective combination of 
government subsidies and microfmance means solar is used for everything 
from desalination for agriculture to wi-fi networks. 

• Flexible and rapid mobile payment systems drive dynamic economic growth 
in the developing world, while the developed world is hampered by entrenched 
banking interests and regulation. 

V_ J 


31 


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Scenario Narratives CLEVER TOGETHER 


LIFE IN CLEVER TOGETHER 

Standing next to his desk at the World Meat Science Lab in Zurich, Alec took 
another bite of the steak that his lab assistants had just presented to him and chewed 
it rather thoughtfully. This wasn’t just any steak. It was research. Alec and his 
research team had been working for months to fabricate a new meat product —one 
that tasted just like beef yet actually contained only 50 percent meat; the remaining 
half was a combination of synthetic meat, fortified grains, and nano-flavoring. 
Finding the “right” formula for that combo had kept the lab’s employees working 
around the clock in recent weeks. And judging from the look on Alec’s face, their 
work wasn’t over. “The flavor is still a few degrees off,” he told them. “And Kofi and 
Alana —see what we can do about enhancing this texture.” 

As Alec watched his team scramble back to their lab benches, he felt confident that 
it wouldn’t be long before they would announce the invention of an exciting new 
meat product that would be served at dinner tables everywhere. And, in truth, Alec’s 
confidence was very well founded. For one, he had the world’s best and brightest 
minds in food science from all over the world working together right here in his 
lab. He also had access to seemingly infinite amounts of data and information on 
everything from global taste preferences to meat distribution patterns —and just a 
few touches on his lab’s research screens (so much easier than the clunky computers 
and keyboards of the old days) gave him instant access to every piece of research 
ever done in meat science or related fields from the 1800s up through the present 
(literally the present —access to posted scientific research was nearly instantaneous, 
delayed by a mere 1.3 seconds). 

Alec also had strong motivation. There was no doubt that meat science —indeed, 
all science —was much more exciting, challenging, and rewarding in 2023 than it 
was a few decades ago. The shift from “lone wolf” science to globally coordinated 
and open-platform research had greatly accelerated the speed and spread of 
breakthrough ideas and developments in all fields. As a result, scientists were 

V_ J 



32 







Scenario Narratives CLEVER TOGETHER 




"\ 


making real progress in addressing planet-wide problems that had previously 
seemed so intractable: people were no longer dying as frequently from preventable 
diseases, for example, and alternative fuels were now mainstream. 

But other trends were troubling —especially to a scientist who had spent his whole 
career researching food. In cities and villages around the world where children 
used to be hungry, access to higher-calorie meals had produced alarming increases 
in the incidence of obesity and diabetes. The demand for meat, in particular, was 
rising, but adding more animals to the planet created its own set of problems, such 
as more methane and spiking water demand. And that’s where Alec saw both need 
and opportunity: why not make the planet’s meat supply go further by creating a 
healthier alternative that contained less real meat? 

“Alec, we have a new version for you to try,” yelled Kofi from across the lab. That 
was fast, thought Alec, as he searched around his desk for the fork. 


V 


J 


33 


Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 







Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 


34 


Step 


HACK ATTACK 




Hack Attack 


An economically unstable and shock-prone 

world in which governments weaken, criminals thrive, 

and dangerous innovations emerge 


Devastating shocks like September 11, the 
Southeast Asian tsunami of 2004, and the 
2010 Haiti earthquake had certainly primed 
the world for sudden disasters. But no one 
was prepared for a world in which large-scale 
catastrophes would occur with such breathtaking 
frequency. The years 2010 to 2020 were dubbed 
the “doom decade” for good reason: the 2012 
Olympic bombing, which killed 13,000, was 
followed closely by an earthquake in Indonesia 
killing 40,000, a tsunami that almost wiped 
out Nicaragua, and the onset of the West China 
Famine, caused by a once-in-a-millennium 
drought linked to climate change. 

Not surprisingly, this opening series of deadly 
asynchronous catastrophes (there were more) put 
enormous pressure on an already overstressed 
global economy that had entered the decade 
still in recession. Massive humanitarian relief 


efforts cost vast sums of money, but the primary 
sources —from aid agencies to developed-world 
governments —had run out of funds to offer. 
Most nation-states could no longer afford their 
locked-in costs, let alone respond to increased 
citizen demands for more security, more 
healthcare coverage, more social programs and 
services, and more infrastructure repair. In 
2014, when mudslides in Lima buried thousands, 
only minimal help trickled in, prompting the 
Economist headline: “Is the Planet Finally 
Bankrupt? ” 

These dire circumstances forced tough tradeoffs. 
In 2015, the U.S. reallocated a large share of its 
defense spending to domestic concerns, pulling 
out of Afghanistan —where the resurgent Taliban 
seized power once again. In Europe, Asia, South 
America, and Africa, more and more nation¬ 
states lost control of their public finances, along 




with the capacity to help their citizens and 
retain stability and order. Resource scarcities and 
trade disputes, together with severe economic 
and climate stresses, pushed many alliances 
and partnerships to the breaking point; they 
also sparked proxy wars and low-level conflict 
in resource-rich parts of the developing 
world. Nations raised trade barriers in order to 
protect their domestic sectors against imports 
and —in the face of global food and resource 
shortages —to reduce exports of agricultural 
produce and other commodities. By 2016, the 
global coordination and interconnectedness 
that had marked the post-Berlin Wall world was 
tenuous at best. 

With government power weakened, order rapidly 
disintegrating, and safety nets evaporating, 
violence and crime grew more rampant. 

Countries with ethnic, religious, or class 
divisions saw especially sharp spikes in hostility: 
Naxalite separatists dramatically expanded 
their guerrilla campaign in East India; Israeli- 
Palestinian bloodshed escalated; and across 
Africa, fights over resources erupted along 
ethnic or tribal lines. Meanwhile, overtaxed 
militaries and police forces could do little to stop 
growing communities of criminals and terrorists 
from gaining power. Technology-enabled gangs 


and networked criminal enterprises exploited 
both the weakness of states and the desperation 
of individuals. With increasing ease, these 
“global guerillas” moved illicit products through 
underground channels from poor producer 
countries to markets in the developed world. 
Using retired 727s and other rogue aircraft, they 
crisscrossed the Atlantic, from South America 
to Africa, transporting cocaine, weapons, and 
operatives. Drug and gun money became a 
common recruiting tool for the desperately poor. 

Criminal networks also grew highly skilled 
at counterfeiting licit goods through reverse 
engineering. Many of these “rip-offs" and 
copycats were of poor quality or downright 
dangerous. In the context of weak health 
systems, corruption, and inattention to 
standards —either within countries or 
from global bodies like the World Health 
Organization —tainted vaccines entered the 
public health systems of several African 
countries. In 2021, 600 children in Cote d’Ivoire 
died from a bogus Hepatitis B vaccine, which 
paled in comparison to the scandal sparked by 
mass deaths from a tainted anti-malarial drug 
years later. The deaths and resulting scandals 
sharply affected public confidence in vaccine 
delivery; parents not just in Africa but elsewhere 



Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 


Scenario Narratives HACK ATTACK 


“WE HAVE THIS LOVE AFFAIR ! 

WITH STRONG CENTRAL STATES, j 
BUT THAT’S NOT THE ONLY ! 
POSSIBILITY. TECHNOLOGY IS ! 

GOING TO MAKE THIS EVEN MORE j 
REAL FOR AFRICA. THERE IS THE i 
SAME CELLPHONE PENETRATION ! 

RATE IN SOMALIA AS IN RWANDA. ! 

IN THAT RESPECT, SOMALIA ! 

WORKS.” j 

- Aidan Eyakuze, Society for International ■ 
Development, Tanzania j 

began to avoid vaccinating their children, and 
it wasn’t long before infant and child mortality 
rates rose to levels not seen since the 1970s. 

Technology hackers were also hard at work. 
Internet scams and pyramid schemes plagued 
inboxes. Meanwhile, more sophisticated 
hackers attempted to take down corporations, 
government systems, and banks via phishing 
scams and database information heists, and their 
many successes generated billions of dollars in 
losses. Desperate to protect themselves and their 
intellectual property, the few multinationals 


still thriving enacted strong, increasingly 
complex defensive measures. Patent applications 
skyrocketed and patent thickets proliferated, 
as companies fought to claim and control even 
the tiniest innovations. Security measures and 
screenings tightened. 

This “wild west” environment had a profound 
impact on innovation. The threat of being 
hacked and the presence of so many thefts and 
fakes lowered the incentives to create “me first” 
rather than “me too” technologies. And so many 
patent thickets made the cross-pollination of 
ideas and research difficult at best. Blockbuster 
pharmaceuticals quickly became artifacts of 
the past, replaced by increased production 
of generics. Breakthrough innovations still 
happened in various industries, but they were 
focused more on technologies that could not be 
easily replicated or re-engineered. And once 
created, they were vigorously guarded by their 
inventors —or even by their nations. In 2022, a 
biofuel breakthrough in Brazil was protected as a 
national treasure and used as a bargaining chip 
in trade with other countries. 

Verifying the authenticity of anything was 
increasingly difficult. The heroic efforts 
of several companies and NGOs to create 



36 








Scenario Narratives HACK ATTACK 


recognized seals of safety and approval proved 
ineffective when even those seals were hacked. 
The positive effects of the mobile and internet 
revolutions were tempered by their increasing 
fragility as scamming and viruses proliferated, 
preventing these networks from achieving the 
reliability required to become the backbone 
of developing economies —or a source of 
trustworthy information for anybody. 

Interestingly, not all of the “hacking” was bad. 
Genetically modified crops (GMOs) and do-it- 
yourself (DIY) biotech became backyard and 
garage activities, producing important advances. 
In 2017, a network of renegade African scientists 
who had returned to their home countries after 
working in Western multinationals unveiled 
the first of a range of new GMOs that boosted 
agricultural productivity on the continent. 

But despite such efforts, the global have/have- 
not gap grew wider than ever. The very rich still 
had the financial means to protect themselves; 
gated communities sprung up from New York 
to Lagos, providing safe havens surrounded by 
slums. In 2025, it was de rigueur to build not 
a house but a high-walled fortress, guarded by 
armed personnel. The wealthy also capitalized on 
the loose regulatory environment to experiment 


with advanced medical treatments and other 
under-the-radar activities. 

Those who couldn’t buy their way out of 
chaos —which was most people —retreated 
to whatever “safety” they could find. With 
opportunity frozen and global mobility at a 
near standstill —no place wanted more people, 
especially more poor people —it was often a 
retreat to the familiar: family ties, religious 
beliefs, or even national allegiance. Trust 
was afforded to those who guaranteed safety 
and survival—whether it was a warlord, an 
evangelical preacher, or a mother. In some 
places, the collapse of state capacity led to a 
resurgence of feudalism. In other areas, people 
managed to create more resilient communities 
operating as isolated micro versions of formerly 
large-scale systems. The weakening of national 
governments also enabled grassroots movements 
to form and grow, creating rays of hope amid 
the bleakness. By 2030, the distinction between 
“developed” and “developing” nations no longer 
seemed particularly descriptive or relevant. • 


37 


Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 



Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 


Scenario Narratives HACK ATTACK 


HEADLINES IN HACK ATTACK 


Warlords Dispense Vital 
Medicines to Southeast 
Asian Communities 
(2028) 


Millennium 
Development Goals 
Pushed Back to 2020 
( 2012 ) 


Islamic Terror 
Networks Thrive in 
Latin America 
(2016) 


Doctors Without Borders 
Confined Within Borders 
( 2020 ) 


2010 2015 2020 2025 2030 


Violence Against 
Minorities and Immigrants 
Spikes Across Asia 
(2014) 


Congo Death Toll Hits 
10,000 in Malaria 
Drug Scandal (2018) 


Nations Struggling with India-Pakistan 

Resource Constraints Race Water War Rages 

to Scale Synthetic Biology (2027) 

( 2021 ) 



\ 

ROLE OF PHILANTHROPY IN HACK ATTACK 


Philanthropy is less about affecting change than about promoting stability and 
addressing basic survival needs. Philanthropic organizations move to support urgent 
humanitarian efforts at the grassroots level, doing “guerrilla philanthropy” by 
identifying the “hackers" and innovators who are catalysts of change in local settings. 

Yet identifying pro-social entrepreneurs is a challenge, because verification is difficult 
amid so much scamming and deception. 

The operational model in this world is a “fortress model” in which philanthropic 
organizations coalesce into a strong, single unit to combat fraud and lack of trust. 
Philanthropies’ biggest assets are their reputation, brand, and legal/financial capacity 
to ward off threats and attempts at destabilization. They also pursue a less global 
approach, retreating to doing work in their home countries or a few countries that they 
know well and perceive as being safe. 

V_ ) 


38 







Scenario Narratives HACK ATTACK 


§B TECHNOLOGY IN HACK ATTACK 


Mounting obstacles to market access and to knowledge creation and sharing slow the 
pace of technological innovation. Creative repurposing of existing technologies —for 
good and bad —is widespread, as counterfeiting and IP theft lower incentives for 
original innovation. In a world of trade disputes and resource scarcities, much effort 
focuses on finding replacements for what is no longer available. Pervasive insecurity 
means that tools of aggression and protection—virtual as well as corporeal —are in 
high demand, as are technologies that will allow hedonistic escapes from the stresses 
of life. 

Technology trends and applications we might see: 

• Echoing the rise of synthetic chemicals in the nineteenth century, synthetic 
biology, often state-funded, is used to “grow” resources and foodstuffs that 
have become scarce. 

• New threats like weaponized biological pathogens and destructive botnets 
dominate public attention, but enduring technologies, like the AK-47, also 
remain weapons of choice for global guerrillas. 

• The internet is overrun with spam and security threats and becomes 
strongly associated with illicit activity —especially on “dark webs” where no 
government can monitor, identify, or restrict activities. 

• Identity-verification technologies become a staple of daily life, with some 
hitches —a database of retina recordings stolen by hackers in 2017 is used to 
create numerous false identities still “at large” in the mid-2020s. 

• With the cost of cosmetic surgery dropping, procedures like the lunchtime 
facelift become routine among emerging middle classes. 

V_ J 


39 


Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 







Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 


Scenario Narratives HACK ATTACK 


1 

LIFE IN HACK ATTACK 

Trent never thought that his past experience as a government intelligence officer 
would convert into something...philanthropic. But in a world full of deceit and 
scamming, his skills at discerning fact from fiction and developing quick yet deep 
local knowledge were highly prized. For three months now he had been working 
for a development organization, hired to find out what was happening in the “grey” 
areas in Botswana —a country that was once praised for its good governance but 
whose laws and institutions had begun to falter in the last few years, with corruption 
on the rise. His instructions were simple: focus not on the dysfunctional (which, 

Trent could see, was everywhere) but rather look through the chaos to see what was 
actually working. Find local innovations and practices that were smart and good 
and might be adopted or implemented elsewhere. “Guerrilla philanthropy” was what 
they called it, a turn of phrase that he liked quite a bit. 

His trip into Botswana had been eventful —to put it mildly. On-time flights were rare 
these days, and the plane got diverted three times because of landing authorization 
snafus. At the Gaborone airport, it took Trent six hours to clear customs and 
immigration. The airport was bereft of personnel, and those on duty took their 
time scrutinizing and re-scrutinizing his visa. Botswana had none of the high-tech 
biometric scanning checkpoints —technology that could literally see right through 
you —that most developed nations had in abundance in their airports, along their 
borders, and in government buildings. Once out of the airport Trent was shocked 
by how many guns he saw —not just slung on the shoulders of police, but carried by 
regular people. He even saw a mother with a baby in one arm and an AK-47 in the 
other. This wasn’t the Botswana he remembered way back when he was stationed 
here 20 years ago as an embassy employee. 

The organization that hired him was probably more right than it realized in calling 
it guerrilla philanthropy. After many weeks spent chasing down leads in Gaborone, 
then an unfortunate stint that had him hiking for miles alone through the Kalahari 

V_ J 







Scenario Narratives HACK ATTACK 



Desert, Trent found himself traveling deep into the Chobe Forest (a nice reprieve, 
he thought, from inhaling all that sand). One of his informants had told him about 
a group of smart youngsters who had set up their own biotechnology lab on the 
banks of the Chobe River, which ran along the forest’s northern boundary. He’d 
been outfitted with ample funds for grant-making, not the forest bribes he had 
heard so much about; regardless of what was taking place in the world around him, 
he was under strict orders to behave ethically. Trent was also careful to cover his 
tracks to avoid being kidnapped by international crime syndicates —including the 
Russian mafia and the Chinese triads —that had become very active and influential 
in Botswana. But he’d made it through, finally, to the lab, which he later learned 
was under the protection of the local gun lord. As expected, counterfeit vaccines 
were being manufactured. But so were GMO seeds. And synthetic proteins. And a 
host of other innovations that the people who hired him would love to know about. 

V_ ) 


41 


Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 







Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 


42 


SMART SCRAMBLE 



Smart Scramble 


An economically depressed world in which individuals and 
communities develop localized, makeshift solutions to a 
growing set of problems 


The global recession that started in 2008 did not 
trail off in 2010 but dragged onward. Vigorous 
attempts to jumpstart markets and economies 
didn’t work, or at least not fast enough to 
reverse the steady downward pull. The combined 
private and public debt burden hanging over the 
developed world continued to depress economic 
activity, both there and in developing countries 
with economies dependent on exporting to 
(formerly) rich markets. Without the ability to 
boost economic activity, many countries saw 
their debts deepen and civil unrest and crime 
rates climb. The United States, too, lost much of 
its presence and credibility on the international 
stage due to deepening debt, debilitated markets, 
and a distracted government. This, in turn, 
led to the fracturing or decoupling of many 


international collaborations started by or reliant 
on the U.S.’s continued strength. 

Also in trouble was China, where social 
stability grew more precarious. Depressed 
economic activity, combined with the ecological 
consequences of China’s rapid growth, started 
to take their toll, causing the shaky balance that 
had held since 1989 to finally break down. With 
their focus trained on managing the serious 
political and economic instability at home, the 
Chinese sharply curtailed their investments 
in Africa and other parts of the developing 
world. Indeed, nearly all foreign investment 
in Africa —as well as formal, institutional 
flows of aid and other support for the poorest 
countries—was cut back except in the gravest 
humanitarian emergencies. Overall, economic 






stability felt so shaky that the occurrence of a 
sudden climate shock or other disaster would 
likely send the world into a tailspin. Luckily, 
those big shocks didn’t occur, though there was a 
lingering concern that they could in the future. 

Not that anyone had time to think about the 
future —present challenges were too pressing. 

In the developed world, unemployment rates 
skyrocketed. So did xenophobia, as companies 
and industries gave the few available jobs to 
native-born citizens, shunning foreign-born 
applicants. Great numbers of immigrants who 
had resettled in the developed world suddenly 
found that the economic opportunities that had 
drawn them were now paltry at best. By 2018, 
London had been drained of immigrants, as they 
headed back to their home countries, taking 
their education and skills with them. Reverse 
migration left holes in the communities of 
departure —both socially and literally —as stores 
formerly owned by immigrants stood empty. 

And their homelands needed them. Across the 
developing world and especially in Africa, 
economic survival was now firmly in local 
hands. With little help or aid coming through 
“official” and organized channels —and in the 
absence of strong trade and foreign currency 
earnings —most people and communities had no 


choice but to help themselves and, increasingly, 
one another. Yet “survival” and “success” 
varied greatly by location —not just by country, 
but by city and by community. Communities 
inside failed states suffered the most, their 
poor growing still poorer. In many places, the 
failures of political leadership and the stresses of 
economic weakness and social conflict stifled the 
ability of people to rise above their 
dire circumstances. 

Not surprisingly, across much of the developing 
world the rural-urban divide gaped wider, 
as more limited availability and access to 
resources like IT and trade made survival 
and self-sufficiency much more challenging 
for non-urban dwellers. Communications and 
interactions that formerly served to bridge one 
family or one village or one student with their 
counterparts in other places —from emailing 
to phone calls to web postings —became less 
reliable. Internet access had not progressed 
far beyond its 2010 status, in part because 
the investment dollars needed to build out the 
necessary infrastructure simply weren’t there. 
When cellphone towers or fiber optic cables 
broke down, repairs were often delayed by 
months or even years. As a result, only people 
in certain geographies had access to the latest 



Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 


Scenario Narratives SMART SCRAMBLE 


“THE SPREADING OF IDEAS : 
DEPENDS ON ACCESS TO i 
COMMUNICATION, PEER j 
GROUPS, AND COMMUNITIES OF : 
PRACTICE. EVEN IF SOMEONE j 
HAS BLUEPRINTS TO MAKE j 
SOMETHING, THEY MAY NOT ! 

HAVE THE MATERIALS OR KNOW- : 

HOW. IN A WORLD SUCH AS | 

THIS, HOW DO YOU CREATE i 
AN ECOSYSTEM OF RESEARCH ! 
AMONG THESE COMMUNITIES?” j 

- Jose Gomez-Marquez, Program Director j 
for the Innovations in International Health I 
initiative (IIH), MIT ; 

communication and internet gadgets, while 
others became more isolated for lack of 
such connections. 

But there were silver linings. Government 
capacity improved in more advanced parts of the 
developing world where economies had already 
begun to generate a self-sustaining dynamic 
before the 2008-2010 crisis, such as Indonesia, 
Rwanda, Turkey, and Vietnam. Areas with good 
access to natural resources, diverse skill sets, 


and a stronger set of overlapping institutions 
did far better than others; so did cities and 
communities where large numbers of “returnees” 
helped drive change and improvement. Most 
innovation in these better-off places involved 
modifying existing devices and technologies to 
be more adaptive to a specific context. But people 
also found or invented new ways —technological 
and non-technological —to improve their 
capacity to survive and, in some cases, to 
raise their overall living standards. In Accra, a 
returning Ghanaian MIT professor, working with 
resettled pharma researchers, helped invent a 
cheap edible vaccine against tuberculosis that 
dramatically reduced childhood mortality across 
the continent. In Nairobi, returnees launched a 
local “vocational education for all” project that 
proved wildly successful and was soon replicated 
in other parts of sub-Saharan Africa. 

Makeshift, “good enough” technology 
solutions —addressing everything from water 
purification and harnessing energy to improved 
crop yield and disease control —emerged to fill 
the gaps. Communities grew tighter. Micro¬ 
manufacturing, communal gardens, and 
patchwork energy grids were created at the local 
level for local purposes. Many communities took 
on the aura of co-ops, some even launching 


44 




Scenario Narratives SMART SCRAMBLE 


currencies designed to boost local trade and 
bring communities closer together. Nowhere was 
this more true than in India, where localized 
experiments proliferated, and succeeded or 
failed, with little connection to or impact on 
other parts of the country —or the world. 

These developments were encouraging, but also 
frustrating. In the absence of enduring trade and 
FDI channels, local experiments and innovations 
could neither scale nor boost overall growth. For 
those looking, it was difficult to find or access 
creative solutions. Scaling was further inhibited 
by the lack of compatible technology standards, 
making innovations difficult to replicate. Apps 
developed in rural China simply didn’t work in 
urban India. 

High-speed internet access—which gradually 
emerged in some areas despite weak government 


or philanthropic support —did help, enabling 
students in isolated pockets in the developing 
world to access knowledge and instruction 
through the written word and other media like 
video. But the development of tangible devices, 
products, and innovations continued to lag in 
places where local manufacturing skills and 
capacities had not yet scaled. More complex 
engineering solutions proved even more difficult 
to develop and diffuse. 

By 2025, collaboration was finally improving, 
with ecosystems of research and sharing —many 
of them “virtual” —beginning to emerge. Yet 
without major progress in global economic 
integration and collaboration, many worried that 
good ideas would stay isolated, and survival and 
success would remain a local —not a global or 
national —phenomenon. • 


45 


Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 



Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 


Scenario Narratives SMART SCRAMBLE 


46 


HEADLINES IN SMART SCRAMBLE 


National Medical Labs in 
Southeast Asia Herald 
New Diagnostics for 
Native Diseases 
(2013) 


Chinese Government 
Pressured as Protests 
Spread to 250 Cities 
(2017) 


Famine Haunts 
Ethiopia—Again 
( 2022 ) 


Maker Faire Ghana Partners 
with ‘Idol’ Franchise to 
Spotlight Young Innovators 
(2027) 


2010 2015 2020 2025 2030 


Low-Cost Water 
Purification Device Halves 
Diarrhea Deaths in India 
(2015) 


'Returnee' Innovators 
Struggle to Expand Sales 
Beyond Home Markets 
( 2020 ) 


VC Spending 
Within Sub-Saharan 
Africa Triples 
(2025) 



\ 

ROLE OF PHILANTHROPY in smart scramble 


Philanthropic organizations look to fund at the grassroots level, in order to reach people 
more quickly and solve short-term problems. The meta-goal in this world is to scale up: 
to identify and build capacity from the individual through the institutional, because 
without global coordination, innovation cannot scale on its own. Philanthropy requires 
a keen screening capacity to identify highly localized solutions, with specialized 
pockets of expertise that make partnerships more challenging and transitions between 
sectors and issues harder to achieve. 


Philanthropy operations are decentralized; headquarters are less important, and 
the ability to quickly access different parts of the world and reconfigure teams on 
short notice is key. Office space is rented by the day or week, not the month or year, 
because more people are in the field-testing, evaluating, and reporting on myriad 
pilot projects. 

V_ ) 







Scenario Narratives SMART SCRAMBLE 




TECHNOLOGY in smart scramble 


Economic and political instability fracture societies in the developed world, resources 
for technology development diminish, and talented immigrants are forced to return 
to their countries of origin. As a result, capacity and knowledge are distributed more 
widely, allowing many small pockets of do-it-yourself innovation to emerge. Low-tech, 
“good enough” solutions abound, cobbled together with whatever materials and designs 
can be found. However, the transfer of cutting-edge technology through foreign direct 
investment is rare. Structural deficiencies in the broader innovation ecosystem — in 
accessing capital, markets, and a stable internet —and in the proliferation of local 
standards limit wider growth and development. 

Technology trends and applications we might see: 

• Energy technology improvements are geared more toward efficiency —getting 
more from existing sources of power —than new-generation technologies, 
though some local improvements in generating and distributing wind and 
geothermal energy do occur. 

• Breakdowns in the global medicine supply chain accelerate the emergence of 
locally bioengineered super-strength homeopathic remedies, which replace 
antibiotics in the dispensaries of many developing-world hospitals. 

• Widespread micro-manufacturing, using 3D printers, enables the fabrication 
of replacement components for engines and machines, allowing “perpetual 
maintenance” to compensate for broken trade links. 

• Garden allotments proliferate in mega-cities as new urban-dwellers seek to 
supplement a scarce food supply and maintain their agricultural heritage. 

• Technically advanced communities use mesh networks to ensure high-speed 
internet access, but most rural poor remain cut off from access. 


47 


V. 


Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 







Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 


48 


Scenario Narratives SMART SCRAMBLE 



] 

LIFE IN SMART SCRAMBLE 

The beat-up six-seater plane in which Lidi was the lone passenger lurched suddenly. 

She groaned, grabbed the armrests, and held on as the plane dipped sharply before 
finally settling into a smooth flight path. Lidi hated small planes. But with very 
few commercial jets crisscrossing Africa these days, she didn’t have much choice. 

Lidi —an Eritrean by birth —was a social entrepreneur on a mission that she deemed 
critical to the future of her home continent, and enduring these plane flights was 
an unfortunate but necessary sacrifice. Working together with a small team of 
technologists, Lidi’s goal was to help the good ideas and innovations that were 
emerging across Africa to spread faster —or, really, spread at all. 

In this, Lidi had her work cut out for her. Accelerating and scaling the impact 
of local solutions developed for very local markets was far from easy —especially 
given the patchiness of internet access across Africa and the myopic perspective 
that was now, in 2025, a widespread phenomenon. She used to worry about how to 
scale good ideas from continent to continent; these days she’d consider it a great 
success to extend them 20 miles. And the creative redundancy was shocking! Just 
last week, in Mali, Lidi had spent time with a farmer whose co-op was developing a 
drought-resistant cassava. They were extremely proud of their efforts, and for good 
reason. Lidi didn’t have the heart to tell them that, while their work was indeed 
brilliant, it had already been done. Several times, in several different places. 

During her many flights, Lidi had spent hours looking out the window, gazing 
down on the villages and cities below. She wished there were an easier way to let 
the innovators in those places know that they might not be inventing, but rather 
independently reinventing, tools, goods, processes, and practices that were already 
in use. What Africa lacked wasn’t great ideas and talent: both were abundant. The 
missing piece was finding a way to connect those dots. And that’s why she was back 
on this rickety plane again and heading to Tunisia. She and her team were now 
concentrating on promoting mesh networks across Africa, so that places lacking 
internet access could share nodes, get connected, and maybe even share and scale 
their best innovations. 

V_ J 







Concluding 

Thoughts 


As you have seen, each of the scenarios, if it were to 
unfold, would call for different strategies and have different 
implications for how a range of organizations will work and 
relate to changes in technology. But no matter what world 
might emerge, there are real choices to be made about what 
areas and goals to address and how to drive success toward 
particular objectives. 


We hope that reading the scenario narratives and 
their accompanying stories about philanthropy, 
technology, and people has sparked your 
imagination, provoking new thinking about 
these emergent themes and their possibilities. 
Three key insights stood out to us as we 
developed these scenarios. 

First, the link between technology and 
governance is critical to consider in better 
understanding how technology could be 
developed and deployed. In some futures, the 
primacy of the nation-state as a unit of analysis 
in development was questioned as both supra- or 
sub-national structures proved more salient to 
the achievement of development goals. In other 
futures, the nation-state’s power strengthened 
and it became an even more powerful actor 
both to the benefit and to the detriment of 


the development process, depending on the 
quality of governance. Technologies will affect 
governance, and governance in turn will play 
a major role in determining what technologies 
are developed and who those technologies are 
intended, and able, to benefit. 

A second recurring theme in the scenarios is that 
development work will require different levels of 
intervention, possibly simultaneously. In some 
scenarios, philanthropic organizations and other 
actors in development face a set of obstacles in 
working with large institutions, but may face a 
yet-unfolding set of opportunities to work with 
nontraditional partners —even individuals. The 
organization that is able to navigate between 
these levels and actors may be best positioned to 
drive success. 


Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 



Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 


Concluding Thoughts 


DEVELOPMENT-LED 

INTERVENTIONS ARE OFTEN NOT 

CAREFUL ENOUGH ABOUT WHAT 

THE TECHNOLOGY NEEDS IN 

ORDER TO WORK ON A THREE, 

FIVE, OR SEVEN YEAR CYCLE. 

WHAT SCALE IS REQUIRED 

FOR DEPLOYMENT TO BE 

SUCCESSFUL? WHAT LEVEL OF 

EDUCATION IS NEEDED 

TO BE SUSTAINABLE IN TERMS 

OF MAINTENANCE? HOW DO 

THESE REQUIREMENTS EVOLVE 

OVER TIME? 

- Isha Ray, Professor, University of 
California-Berkeley School of Information, 
Energy, and Resources Group 


The third theme highlights the potential value 
of scenarios as one critical element of strategy 
development. These narratives have served to 
kick-start the idea generation process, build the 
future-oriented mindset of participants, and 
provide a guide for ongoing trend monitoring 
and horizon scanning activities. They also offer 
a useful framework that can help in tracking and 
making sense of early indicators and milestones 
that might signal the way in which the world is 
actually transforming. 

While these four scenarios vary significantly 
from one another, one theme is common to them 
all: new innovations and uses of technology 
will be an active and integral part of the 
international development story going forward. 
The changing nature of technologies could 
shape the characteristics of development and the 
kinds of development aid that are in demand. In 
a future in which technologies are effectively 
adopted and adapted by poor people on a broad 
scale, expectations about the provision of 
services could fundamentally shift. Developing 
a deeper understanding of the ways in which 
technology can impact development will better 
prepare everyone for the future, and help all of 
us drive it in new and positive directions. 


50 




Appendix 


CRITICAL UNCERTAINTIES 

The following is a list of the 15 critical uncertainties presented to participants during this project’s 
primary scenario creation workshop. These uncertainties were themselves selected from a significantly 
longer list generated during earlier phases of research and extensive interviewing. The uncertainties fall 
into three categories: technological, social and environmental, and economic and political. 

Each uncertainty is presented along with two polar endpoints, both representing a very different direction 
in which that uncertainty might develop. 

TECHNOLOGICAL UNCERTAINTIES 


new technologies 

technologies with the most 
impact on development 

► 

existing technologies 

both developed and ^ 
developing worlds ^ 

origin of technology 
innovations critical to 
development 

► 

developed world and some 
BRICs 

slow the adoption ^ 
of novel technologies ^ 

social and cultural norms 

► 

allow for rapid adoption 
of novel technologies 


new innovations that 



few 

substantially reduce child and 
infant mortality (vaccines, 

► 

many 


treatments, cures) 



SOCIAL & ENVIRONMENTAL UNCERTAINTIES 



static, traditional 

community identity in the 
developing world 

► 

dynamic, open to the 
novel and nontraditional 

restricted ^ 

educational and employment 
opportunities for women 

► 

expanding 

infrequent and manageable 

occurrence of “shocks” 
like disease, famine, and 
natural disasters 

► 

frequent and highly 
disruptive 


quality of the local 



poor and worsening ^ 

environment in the developing 
world (air, water, sanitation, 

► 

improved and improving 


built environment, etc.) 



de-prioritized ^ 

global climate change 
awareness and action 

► 

prioritized 


51 


Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 



Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 


ECONOMIC & POLITICAL UNCERTAINTIES 


52 


worse than expected 

◄ 

global economic performance, 
2010-2015 

► 

improves significantly 

inhibiting 

◄ 

rules and norms around 
entrepreneurial activity 
education and training 

► 

supportive 

static 

◄ 

opportunities in the 

► 

increasing 



developing world 



marginal and contained 

◄ 

conflict in the developing world 

► 

pervasive and widespread 

weak, with barriers to 

◄ 

international economic and 

► 

strong, with more 

cooperation 

strategic relationships 

supranational cooperation 

worse and more prone to 
disruptions 

◄ 

food security in 
the developing world 

► 

better and more secure 


LIST OF PARTICIPANTS 

This report is the result of extensive effort and 
collaboration among Rockefeller Foundation 
initiative staff, Foundation grantees, and external 
experts. The Rockefeller Foundation and GBN 
would like to extend special thanks to all of the 
individuals who contributed their thoughtfulness 
and expertise throughout the scenario process. 
Their enthusiastic participation in interviews, 
workshops, and the ongoing iteration of the 
scenarios made this co-creative process more 
stimulating and engaging that it could ever have 
been otherwise. 


ROCKEFELLER FOUNDATION STAFF 

Project Leads 

Claudia Juech, Managing Director 
Evan Michelson, Senior Research Associate 

Core Team 

Karl Brown, Associate Director 
Robert Buckley, Managing Director 
Lily Dorment, Research Associate 
Brinda Ganguly, Associate Director 
Veronica Olazabal, Research Associate 
Gary Toenniessen, Managing Director 

Thank you as well to all Foundation staff who 
participated in the scenario creation workshop 
in December. 


A special thank you also to Laura Yousef 



GLOBAL BUSINESS NETWORK 

Andrew Blau, Co-President 

Tara Capsuto, Senior Practice Associate 

Lynn Carruthers, Visual Practitioner 

Michael Costigan, Practitioner 

Jenny Johnston, Senior Editor 

Barbara Kibbe, Vice President of 
Client Services, Monitor Institute 

Brie Linkenhoker, Senior Practitioner 

Peter Schwartz, Chairman 

EXTERNAL EXPERTS 

Stewart Brand, Cofounder of GBN and President of the 
Long Now Foundation 

Robert de Jongh, Managing Regional Director, 

SNV Latin America 

Jose Gomez-Marquez, Program Director for the 
Innovations in International Health initiative (IIH), 

Massachusetts Institute of Technology 

Natalie Jeremijenko, Experimental Designer and 
Director of xdesign Environmental Health Clinic, 

New York University 

Athar Osama, Visiting Fellow, Frederick S. Pardee 
Center for the Study of the Longer-Range Future, 

Boston University 

Isha Ray, Professor, School of Information (Energy and 
Resources Group), University of California-Berkeley 

Enrique Rueda-Sabater, Director of Strategy and 
Business Development for Emerging Markets, Cisco 

Caroline Wagner, Senior Analyst, SRI International 
and Research Scientist, Center for International 
Science and Technology Policy, The George 
Washington University 


ROCKEFELLER FOUNDATION GRANTEES 

G.K. Bhat, TARU Leading Edge, India 

Le Bach Duong, Institute for Social Development 
Studies, Vietnam 

Aidan Eyakuze, Society for International 
Development, Tanzania 

Michael Free, PATH, Seattle, WA 

Namrita Kapur, Root Capital, Boston, MA 

Paul Kukubo, Kenya ICT Board, Kenya 

Joseph Mureithi, Kenyan Agriculture Research 
Institute, Kenya 


53 


Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development 



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